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INDIANAPOLIS — The Oklahoma City Thunder had a comeback of their own.

Trailing for most of the game, looking exhausted and exasperated, and facing a 10-point deficit late in the third quarter, the Thunder found a spark in the nick of time.

Oklahoma City defeated the Indiana Pacers 111-104 in Game 4 of the NBA Finals on Friday, June 13, and evened the series at 2-2.

NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s 15-foot baseline jumper with 2:23 left in the fourth quarter gave the Thunder a 104-103 lead, their first lead since late in the second quarter. Preceding that, Gilgeous-Alexander made a 3-pointer and Chet Holmgren had a key block.

Gilgeous-Alexander made two free throws giving the Thunder a 107-103 lead with 44 seconds left. Indiana’s Bennedict Mathurin missed three of four free throw attempts in the final 23.8 seconds.

Gilgeous-Alexander scored 15 of OKC’s last 16 points in the final 4:38.

This back-and-forth series continues to deliver.

The Pacers’ offensive and defensive pressure stifled the Thunder for the first three quarters. But just as the Pacers keep playing until the final buzzer, the Thunder did the same in a game it looked like they would lose. Indiana took a 103-99 lead with 3:20 remaining in the fourth and didn’t make a field goal the rest of the game.

Oklahoma City had to overcome not only a deficit but its own poor shooting on 3-pointers (17.6%) and stagnant offense (10 assists on 37 made field goals).

Gilgeous-Alexander had a strange game in an odd victory for the Thunder – 35 points (10-for-10 on free throws), three rebounds and three steals but he did not have an assist. It was his 14th playoff game with at least 30 points.

‘We knew it (was a must-win) when we woke up this morning,’ Gilgeous-Alexander told ABC after the game.

Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams (27 points), Holmgren (14 points) and Alex Caruso (20 points) combined for 96 of the Thunder’s points.

The Pacers had another balanced scoring attack. Five players reached double figures in points led by Pascal Siakam’s 20 points, eight rebounds, five assists and five steals. Tyrese Haliburton had 18 points and seven assists, and reserve Obi Toppin contributed 17 points and seven rebounds.

Game 5 is Monday, June 16, in Oklahoma City (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC), and teams that win Game 5 of a 2-2 Finals win the series 74.2% of the time (23-8).

Both teams had little rest before Game 4. USA TODAY Sports provided the latest updates and highlights. See what you missed:

NBA Finals Game 4: Highlights

Final: Thunder 111, Pacers 104

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Lu Dort capitalized from the charity stripe and Oklahoma City came back from seven down in the fourth quarter to win Game 4 and knot the NBA Finals at 2-2. Game 5 is Monday, June 16, (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC) in Oklahoma City. — Heather Tucker

3Q: Pacers 87, Thunder 80

It had seemed that every time the Pacers went on a run and tried to pull away, the Thunder came right back. With a 3-1 deficit just 12 minutes away, Oklahoma City will have to prove that again, with the Pacers taking a seven-point lead into the fourth quarter.

The biggest difference of this game has been 3-point shooting. The Thunder, perhaps affected by tired legs, have made just 2 of their 14 attempts from beyond the arc, for a staggeringly low 14.3%.

Compare that to Indiana’s clip from deep, 11-of-28 (39.3%), giving the Pacers a +27 advantage on 3-point shots.

The Pacers have four players in double figures in scoring, with forward Obi Toppin’s 15 providing a massive lift off the bench. Toppin scored eight in the period, including a pair of 3s during a key runmidway through the period.

Pacers forward Pascal Siakam leads Indiana with 20 points, and also has seven rebounds, five assists and five steals.

The Thunder have appeared fatigued, and are shooting 44.4% overall from the field. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has 20 points, Jalen Williams has 23 and Alex Caruso has 17 off the bench. Aside from that, the rest of the Thunder have just 20 points combined. — Lorenzo Reyes

Raptors superfan at Game 4 to support Pascal Siacam

INDIANAPOLIS — Raptors superfan Nav Bhatia is in attendance, supporting former Raptor Pascal Siakam who was part of Toronto’s 2019 championship team. — Jeff Zillgitt

Haliburton attempts first free throw of series before halftime

Tyrese Haliburton attempted his first free throw of the series with 28.3 seconds left in the second quarter, giving the Pacers a 60-57 lead at halftime of Game 3 of the NBA Finals.

Haliburton got on the board quickly, knocking down a 3-pointer in the opening minutes to give the Pacers an 11-6 lead over the Thunder with 9:23 remaining in the first quarter. Then, he experienced a scoring drought. 

Haliburton was held scoreless for over 20 minutes in the first half. He didn’t score again until there was 1:07 remaining in the second quarter.

He finished the first half with eight points, shooting 3-of-6 from the field and 1-of-3 from beyond the arc. He also added five assists and one steal. — Cydney Henderson and Jeff Zillgitt

Halftime: Pacers 60, Thunder 57

This is turning into a tight, back-and-forth game.

And with the potential of a commanding 3-1 lead hanging in the balance, the Indiana Pacers are carrying a modest, three-point lead into the half.

As they have all series, the Pacers are getting multiple contributions; all nine players who have stepped on the floor have scored at least three points, with forward Pascal Siakam (14) leading the way and Tyrese Haliburton scoring eight. He finally got his first free throw of the series in the second half.

In the first half, Indiana swung the ball and whipped it up and down the court, generating 15 assists on 21 made field goals.

For the Thunder, it has been more of a slog. NBA Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has 12 points on 6-of-11 shooting, but he has recorded just two rebounds and failed to register an assist, steal or block. Oklahoma City forward Jalen Williams leads all players with 16 points.

One other interesting note, the Thunder have struggled significantly from 3, hitting just 1-of-10 from beyond the arc. The Pacers, meanwhile, started red hot from deep but cooled down, hitting 7-of-19 (36.8%) in the first half, to give them an 18-point edge from 3. — Lorenzo Reyes

Thunder guard Lu Dort called for flagrant foul

Just minutes after he was called for a flagrant level one foul, Pacers forward Obi Toppin was on the receiving end of one.

Perhaps in a move that was intended to send a message for Toppin’s hard foul on Thunder guard Alex Caruso, Oklahoma City guard Lu Dort swiped at Toppin during an attempted layup, making clear contact with Toppin’s head.

Toppin would split the free throws. — Lorenzo Reyes

Pacers forward Obi Toppin picks up flagrant foul

After a potential flagrant foul call wasn’t enforced upon review late in Game 3, one was called midway through Game 4.

During a breakaway layup attempt, Pacers forward Obi Toppin checked Thunder guard Alex Caruso, sending Caruso tumbling to the court. Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein, in an attempt to protect his teammate, then confronted Toppin, who shoved Hartenstein.

Although the infraction was called as a common foul on the floor, upon review it was determined to be a flagrant level one, while Hartenstein and Toppin were given double technical fouls.

Caruso would hit both free throws. — Lorenzo Reyes

1Q: Pacers 35, Thunder 34

The Indiana Pacers punched first in Game 4, but the Oklahoma City Thunder responded.

After Indiana opened an early nine-point lead, the Thunder ripped off a quick 9-0 run midway through the first quarter to tighten the period. Through one, the Pacers are up by one, 35-34.

Pacers forward Pascal Siakam set the tone early, scoring 10 points on 3-of-5 shooting, though his defense — and his four steals — also gave Oklahoma City problems. The Pacers shot 55%, including 4-of-8 from 3-point range.

The Thunder doubled up Indiana in the paint, 16-8, as coach Mark Daigneault opted to return to his previous starting lineup that included Isaiah Hartenstein in a double-big unit. Forward Jalen Williams led all Thunder players with 12 points on 3-of-6 shooting, though he got to the line early, draining all six of his attempts there.

The Pacers are continuing to do a superb job of frustrating NBA Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, pressuring him constantly. He has just four points on 2-of-5 shooting and has not attempted a free throw. — Lorenzo Reyes

Caitlin Clark among famous faces at NBA Finals Game 4

Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever and former Pacers players Reggie Miller and Jalen Rose were among those in attendance at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

Former NFL player Reggie Wayne, former NBA players Grant Hill and Charles Barkley and former Pacers Travis Best, Darnell Hillman, Detlef Schrempf, Austin Croshere, C.J. Watson, Haywoode Workman, Billy Keller, Dale Davis, Roy Hibbert, Metta World Peace, Jeff Foster, Brad Miller and Mark Jackson also came out.

Gonzaga men’s basketball coach Mark Few was in the crowd and former Indianapolis Colts player and media personality Pat McAfee was spotted. — Heather Tucker and Jeff Zillgitt

NBA Finals Game 4 tips off: Pacers off to hot start

The Indiana Pacers look like a team intent on taking a commanding 3-1 series lead in the NBA Finals.

Indiana stormed out of the gate Friday night, making four of its first five shots, including its first three tries from beyond the arc. The Pacers also continued their trend of pressuring Oklahoma City the entire length of the floor, something that appeared to grind the Thunder down in Game 3 on Wednesday, June 11.

In spite of the Pacers pressure, however, the Thunder opened the game reasonably well, shooting 42.9% from the floor on their seven attempts.

All five starters for the Pacers have scored at least three points, and Indiana has opened an early 20-12 lead through five minutes in the first quarter. — Jeff Zillgitt

What time is Thunder vs. Pacers game today?

The Indiana Pacers host the Oklahoma City Thunder for Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. The game is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. ET.

Where to watch Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers Game 4

  • Time: 8:30 p.m. ET
  • Location: Gainbridge Fieldhouse (Indianapolis, Indiana)
  • TV: ABC
  • Stream: Fubo, Sling TV

Watch the NBA Finals with Fubo

NBA Finals Game 4: Thunder starting lineup

  • Jalen Williams
  • Chet Holmgren
  • Isaiah Hartenstein
  • Lu Dort
  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

NBA Finals Game 4: Pacers starting lineup

  • Pascal Siakam
  • Aaron Nesmith
  • Myles Turner
  • Andrew Nembhard
  • Tyrese Haliburton

Isaiah Hartenstein back in starting lineup

INDIANAPOLIS — Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault has made another change to his starting lineup – putting center Isaiah Hartenstein back into the starting lineup instead of guard Cason Wallace, who started the first three games in place of Hartenstein.

Chet Holmgren and Hartenstein, who started in the first three rounds of the playoffs, have played just 10 minutes together during the Finals, but the Thunder have outscored the Pacers 22-15 in that time. After the Pacers scored 50 points in the paint in Game 3, Daigneault is looking for more rim protection in Game 4.  — Jeff Zillgitt

NBA Finals Game 4: Thunder vs. Pacers injury update

There are no starters listed on the Game 4 injury report including Indiana guard Tyrese Haliburton, who was tremendous in Game 3 after walking with a limp following Game 2 and what he called “a lower leg thing.” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said Pacers center Myles Turner wasn’t feeling well in Game 3. With a day between games, Carlisle said before Game 4 that Turner “seems to be better. But he’s going to play. As you say, he’s not on the injury report. I know he’s looking forward to getting back out there.”

Pacers backup forward Jarace Walker remains sidelined with a sprained right ankle. Carlisle said earlier in the series there’s hope he could return later in the Finals but that’s not guaranteed. — Jeff Zillgitt

How will the Thunder, SGA handle Indiana’s pressure defense?

INDIANAPOLIS — In Game 3, the Pacers “limited” MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to 24 points – six fewer than his playoff average of 30.1 – and forced him into six turnovers.

That is one aspect to watch in Game 4.

“I thought we were prepared for that,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said about 90 minutes before Game 4. “I thought we attacked it well for portions of the game. We had really good stretches. And didn’t attack it well enough for enough of the game. …

“We know they are going to pressure again. They’ve been pretty consistent with that. We think we have some solutions to that, but we got to go do it. We’ve got to have the will to have more force than they have pressure and physicality in the perimeter.” — Jeff Zillgitt

NBA 3-pointer reigns supreme for championship teams

The NBA’s 3-point shot has enemies.

Too many 3s, they say. The shot is ruining the game, they say.

And those critics of the 3-point shot found ammunition in the Eastern Conference semifinals of this season’s playoffs when the Boston Celtics attempted 60 3-pointers and missed 45 against the New York Knicks. The guffawing ignored the fact that Boston’s 3-point shooting was instrumental in its 2023-24 championship season and in its 61-21 record this season.

Regardless of your aesthetic view of how basketball should be played and what it should look like, the 3-point shot has turned divisive but remains vital to winning championships.

USA TODAY’s Jeff Zillgitt takes a deeper look at this divisive shot.

Caitlin Clark plans to attend Game 4

Caitlin Clark, who has missed five WNBA games with the Indiana Fever with a quadricep injury, said she was planning to be at Game 4.

‘Hopefully they can finish it out in five, because I won’t be able to come to Game 6,’ Clark told Tony East, who publishes AllPacers and covers the Pacers and Fever.

Clark, who will return with the Fever against the New York Liberty on Saturday, June 14, has seemingly been a good luck charm. The Pacers are 8-0 in postseason games she has attended. ‒ Heather Tucker

NBA Finals Game 4 referees

  • Scott Foster (18th Finals)
  • Josh Tiven (sixth Finals)
  • Sean Wright (second Finals)

Opinion: NBA wanted parity – and got it

If the NBA Finals matchup of the league’s 23rd and 27th-ranked media markets is supposed to spell doom for the league, it is a doom the NBA’s owners intentionally brought on themselves. 

While two glitz-free Midwestern cities in the Finals might not have the celebrity pull the NBA has largely enjoyed through its historically successful franchises, it was an inevitable outcome once the league designed a collective bargaining agreement that dismantled its traditional cycle of superteams and dynasties. 

Welcome to the new NBA, where championship windows are smaller, the life cycle of a roster is shorter and the number of teams that can win a title in any given year is beyond anything we’ve seen in our lifetimes. — Dan Wolken Read Wolken’s full column here.

Where is Game 4 between the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder?

The Indiana Pacers host the Oklahoma City Thunder at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis for Game 4 of the NBA Finals.

How many Finals have the Pacers won?

The Indiana Pacers have not won an NBA Championship. They have two Eastern Conference titles (2000, 2025).

How many Finals have the Thunder won?

The Oklahoma City Thunder have one NBA Championship. However, it came in 1979 when the team was the Seattle SuperSonics. They have not won a title since moving to Oklahoma City in 2008.

Thunder vs. Pacers NBA Finals picks: USA TODAY staff predictions

USA TODAY: Every expert picks the Thunder

Ahead of the series opener, all of the NBA experts at USA Today Sports picked the Oklahoma City Thunder to beat the Indiana Pacers in the 2025 NBA Finals

  • Scooby Axson: Thunder in five
  • Jordan Mendoza: Thunder in six
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Thunder in six
  • Heather Tucker: Thunder in five
  • James Williams: Thunder in six
  • Jeff Zillgitt: Thunder in five

Thunder vs. Pacers predictions, expert picks for NBA Finals Game 4

USA TODAY: Most pick the Thunder in Game 4

  • Scooby Axson: Pacers 118, Thunder 108
  • Jordan Mendoza: Thunder 109, Pacers 102
  • Cydney Henderson: Thunder 108, Pacers 106
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Thunder 106, Pacers 97
  • Heather Tucker: Thunder 103, Pacers 90
  • James Williams: Pacers 110, Thunder 104
  • Jeff Zillgitt: Thunder 111, Pacers 99

Thunder vs. Pacers odds: Game 4

The Oklahoma City Thunder are favorites to even the series 2-2 with the Indiana Pacers in Game 4 of the 2025 NBA Finals, according to BetMGM (odds as of afternoon of Friday, June 13):

  • Spread: Thunder (-6.5)
  • Moneyline: Thunder (-250); Pacers (+200)
  • Over/under: 227.5

How to stream NBA Finals Game 4: Thunder vs. Pacers

Game 4 between the Thunder and Pacers is available on ABC. Fans can also stream the action with Sling TV and Fubo, which offers a free trial for new users.

Thunder vs. Pacers Game 4 TV channel

The Indiana Pacers host the Oklahoma City Thunder at 8:30 p.m. ET with coverage on ABC.

NBA Finals schedule: Pacers vs. Thunder

  • Game 1, June 5: Pacers 111, Thunder 110
  • Game 2, June 8: Thunder 123, Pacers 107
  • Game 3, June 11: Pacers 116, Thunder 107
  • Game 4, June 13: Thunder 111, Pacers 104
  • Game 5, June 16: Pacers at Thunder | ABC, Fubo | 8:30 p.m.
  • Game 6, June 19: Thunder at Pacers | ABC, Fubo | 8:30 p.m.
  • Game 7, June 22: Pacers at Thunder | ABC, Fubo | 8 p.m.*

All times Eastern; *-if necessary

NBA Championship odds

The Oklahoma City Thunder still remain the favorite to win the 2025 NBA Finals over the Indiana Pacers, despite being down 2-1 entering Game 4, according to BetMGM (odds as of the afternoon of Friday, June 13):

  • Series winner: Thunder (-250); Pacers (+200)

Updated NBA Finals MVP odds

Odds via BetMGM on Thursday, June 12

  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (-235)
  • Tyrese Haliburton (+275)
  • Pascal Siakam (+900)
  • Jalen Williams (+8000)
  • Chet Holmgren (+10000)
  • Bennedict Mathurin (+10000)

NBA playoff bracket 

Eastern Conference finals 

  • No. 4 Indiana Pacers def. No. 3 New York Knicks, 4-2

Western Conference finals 

  • No. 1 Oklahoma City Thunder def. No. 6 Minnesota Timberwolves, 4-1

NBA Finals

  • No. 4 Indiana Pacers vs. No. 1 Oklahoma City Thunder (Pacers lead series 2-1)

Opinion: Pacers bench steals Game 3

Indiana’s bench stole Game 3, helping the Pacers to a 116-107 victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, June 11, pushing the Pacers to a 2-1 series lead.

A 10-year veteran, T.J. McConnell was a major part of a massive Pacers’ bench effort that reshaped the tone of the series, scoring 10 points, delivering five assists and collecting five steals.

Read more on the Indiana Pacers inspired Game 3 win via Jeff Zillgitt’s breakdown.

NBA Finals matchup: SGA vs. Haliburton

The 2025 NBA Finals is, in many ways, a celebration of the point guard.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the NBA’s Most Valuable Player and the Oklahoma City Thunder superstar, and Tyrese Haliburton, the pass-first point guard with a penchant in the clutch, are each franchise’s hope to win the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

Though they likely won’t match up directly all the time, the responsibility of guarding the other likely falling to more specialized defenders, Gilgeous-Alexander and Haliburton are reshaping the image of the point guard in the modern NBA.

USA TODAY’s Jeff Zillgitt and Lorenzo Reyes look at the Pacers and Thunder’s biggest stars.

NBA Finals: Complete Oklahoma City Thunder roster

  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
  • Chet Holmgren
  • Jalen Williams
  • Luguentz Dort
  • Alex Caruso
  • Isaiah Joe
  • Cason Wallace
  • Jaylin Williams
  • Aaron Wiggins
  • Kenrich Williams
  • Isaiah Hartenstein
  • Ousmane Diang
  • Nikola Topic
  • Ajay Mitchell
  • Dillon Jones

NBA Finals: Complete Indiana Pacers roster

  • Tyrese Haliburton
  • Pascal Siakam
  • Myles Turner
  • Benedict Mathurin
  • Obi Toppin
  • Andrew Nebhard
  • Aaron Nesmith
  • T.J. McConnell
  • Isaiah Jackson
  • Jarace Walker
  • Ben Sheppard
  • Johnny Furphy
  • James Johnson
  • Thomas Bryant

2025 All-NBA team 

Oklahoma City Thunder guard and league Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic were unanimous selections from a panel of 100 global reporters and broadcasters who cover the NBA voted on the squad. View the complete list. 

NBA champions by year

Winners over the last 20 years. For a full list of champions, visit NBA.com.

  • 2023-24 — Boston Celtics 
  • 2022-23 — Denver Nuggets
  • 2021-22 — Golden State Warriors
  • 2020-21 — Milwaukee Bucks 
  • 2019-20 — Los Angeles Lakers 
  • 2018-19 — Toronto Raptors 
  • 2017-18 — Golden State Warriors 
  • 2016-17 — Golden State Warriors 
  • 2015-16 — Cleveland Cavaliers 
  • 2014-15 — Golden State Warriors 
  • 2013-14 — San Antonio Spurs 
  • 2012-13 — Miami Heat 
  • 2011-12 — Miami Heat 
  • 2010-11 — Dallas Mavericks 
  • 2009-10 — Los Angeles Lakers 
  • 2008-09 — Los Angeles Lakers 
  • 2007-08 — Boston Celtics
  • 2006-07 — San Antonio Spurs 
  • 2005-06 — Miami Heat 
  • 2004-05 — San Antonio Spurs 

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Omaha magic arrived on Day 1 of the College World Series, and it is all thanks to Oregon State left fielder Gavin Turley.

Facing the first pitch of his at-bat in the bottom of the ninth inning with a runner on first, Turley laced a line drive down into the left field corner to score Aiva Arquette and give No. 8 Oregon State a 4-3 walk-off win against Louisville at the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.

It is the first walk-off win for the Beavers in their eight trips to the College World Series, according to the ESPN broadcast.

‘Trying to hit something hard. Hit something over the plate, ‘Turley told ESPN’s Kris Budden after the game. ‘Didn’t try to do too much, to be honest. Just put a good swing on the ball in the zone.

He added on the feel of his heartbeat after the walk-off: ‘It’s off the charts. Can’t believe I’m standing here. I’m still out of breath. That was awesome.’

Turley’s heroics in Omaha at Charles Schwab Field Omaha didn’t come without a wacky top of the ninth inning, which he played a factor into. Leading 3-1 going into the ninth inning, Turley attempted to make a diving catch on a live drive hit to him by Louisville left fielder Zion Rose. However, Turley misplayed the ball, allowing Rose to begin the inning with a lead-off triple.

Rose was then brought home one batter later by Tague Davis, who beat the shift with a single up the middle. Kamau Neighbors plated Alex Alicea to even the score at 3-3 on a single up the middle, after Alicea reached third on a two-error play by Arquette and Oregon State catcher Wilson Weber.

Earlier in the game, Turley set a new Oregon State single-postseason program record for most RBIs that his head coach, Mitch Canham, used to hold. Turley’s first RBI of the night came on a groundout to second that allowed Trent Caraway to come across home for the first run of the night.

The meeting between the Beavers and the Cardinals was the first since both teams met up in the 2013 College World Series, a game that Oregon State also won.

Next up for Oregon State will be No. 13 Coastal Carolina, which defeated Arizona 7-4 earlier in the day to extend its nation-leading 24-game win streak, on June 15 at 7 p.m. ET. A win against the Chanticleers would advance the Beavers to the CWS semifinals.

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In the lead-up to the 2025 U.S. Open, USGA CEO Mike Whan said that Oakmont Country Club will provide ‘golf’s toughest test.’ He wasn’t lying. The notoriously challenging course in Pennsylvania will soon officially claim its first victims, including a pair of former champions that represent LIV Golf.

Fourteen LIV golfers were in the field when the third major of the year teed off on Thursday, but seemingly less than half will remain after the cut is made. (The cut line was projected at 7-over when play was suspended Friday.)

Defending champion Bryson DeChambeau (+10) and 2016 U.S. Open champion Dustin Johnson (+10), whose win came at Oakmont Country Club, are among the golfers that are likely done after 36 holes.

The U.S. Open remains the only major Phil Mickelson hasn’t won in his career and the title remains elusive; Mickelson sits at 8-over on the tournament. Mickelson, 54, has finished second at the U.S. Open a record six times.

The second round of the 2025 U.S. Open was suspended at 8:15 p.m. ET on Friday due to lighting in the area with a handful of golfers still on the course. The cut line won’t be finalized until the second round officially concludes Saturday. Play resumes at 7:30 a.m. ET.

If the cut line holds at 7-over, Jon Rahm and Brooks Koepka will be the only former U.S. Open champions from LIV still in contention. Rahm was crowned champion in 2021 after a win at Torrey Pines, while Koepka won back-to-back U.S. Open titles in 2017 and 2018 at Erin Hills and Shinnecock Hills, respectively.

Here’s a look at which LIV golfers made it into the weekend and who missed the cut:

Which LIV golfers will make the cut at the 2025 U.S. Open?

Six LIV golfers are likely remain in the field at the 2025 U.S. Open:

  • Brooks Koepka: +2 (F)
  • Tyrrell Hatton: +3 (F)
  • Carlos Ortiz: +3 (F)
  • Jon Rahm: +4 (F)
  • Marc Leishman: +6 (F)
  • Patrick Reed: +7 (F)

Which LIV golfers will miss the cut at the 2025 U.S. Open?

Eight LIV golfers likely won’t make the cut, which is projected at 7-over:

  • Phil Mickelson: +8 (F)
  • Cameron Smith: +8 (F)
  • Jinichiro Kozuma: +9 (17)*
  • Joaquin Niemann: +10 (F)
  • Dustin Johnson: +10 (F)
  • Bryson DeChambeau: +10 (F)
  • José Luis Ballester Barrio: +12 (F)
  • Richard Bland: +18 (F)

*Golfer was still on the course when second-round play was suspended Friday

How to watch 2025 U.S. Open: TV, streaming

Here’s the complete schedule for the 2025 U.S. Open: 

All times Eastern

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It will be an early start for 13 U.S. Open competitors, who will be asked to finish out the second round on Saturday, June 14.

The second round of the U.S. Open came to a halt Friday evening after rain poured down on Oakmont Country Club. Officials suspended play leaving more than a dozen golfers still out on the course.

After the second round is finalized, the third round is expected to continue with Sam Burns and J.J. Spaun at the top of the leaderboard.

Burns took over the top spot at 3-under-par after Spaun stumbled in the second round, surrendering the lead he produced in the first round. Burns moved up 32 spots after shooting an impressive 5-under-par in the second round. Spaun is sitting in second on the leaderboard at -2 after shooting notching a 2-over second round. Viktor Hovland (-1 for the tournament), Adam Scott (Even) and Ben Griffin (Even) round out the top five.

Here’s what to know for Day 3 of the U.S. Open on Saturday, June 14, including the start time and how to watch:

When will Round 2 of US Open finish?

Thirteen golfers were still on the course when the second round was suspended for inclement weather. All 13 had completed at least 16 holes, and each will pick up exactly where they left off on Saturday, June 14, beginning at 7:30 a.m. ET.

South Africa’s Thriston Lawrence, who is tied for sixth on the leaderboard at +1, is among the golfers that still need to complete the second round. Two other golfers – Chris Gotterup (+5 through 17) and Philip Barbaree, Jr. (+6 through 16) are hovering around the projected cut line of +7.

When will Round 3 of US Open begin?

The third round is scheduled to begin around 9 a.m. ET from the first tee. Round 3 will be played in groups of two, all starting from hole No. 1. Tee times will run to approximately 3:30 p.m. ET.

How to watch US Open on Saturday?

The 2025 U.S. Open is being broadcast by NBC and USA Network, with the two networks splitting coverage for the third and final rounds. All rounds of the U.S. Open will be live-streamed on Peacock, usopen.com, the USGA app and Fubo, which offers a free trial. Peacock will also broadcast U.S. Open All-Access, its whip-around style offering, for every round.

Third round: Saturday, June 14

  • 12-8 p.m. on NBC, Fubo
  • 10 a.m.-12 p.m. on USA Network, Fubo

Stream the U.S. Open on Fubo (free trial)

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Oregon State baseball snapped a seven-year College World Series drought by winning the Corvallis Super Regional, and continued its ‘road warrior’ mentality with an opening win in Omaha.

The eighth-seeded Beavers won in style against Louisville, walking off the Cardinals after giving up a ninth-inning lead to close down Day 1 of the 2025 CWS from Charles Schwab Field Omaha.

Following three scoreless innings, Oregon State jumped on the board first with a two-run fourth inning that started with a Trent Caraway single and Aiva Arquette to put two runners on. Gavin Turley, the eventual hero of the game, drove in the first run with a groundout to second. One batter later, Wilson Weber drove in another run with an RBI single to get Oregon State up 2-0.

The teams then traded a run in the sixth inning, followed by two more scoreless innings. Louisville managed to tie the game in the top of the ninth inning after Turley failed to make a diving grab in left field instead of fielding a base hit. That allowed Zion Rose to triple, immediately putting a runner in scoring position, which he did after a Tague Davis single to left center.

Another set of errors then allowed Alex Alicea to advance to third base and easily score off a single from Kamau Neighbors to tie the game 3-3 and send the game to the bottom of the ninth.

Oregon State’s nightmare was short-lived, however, with Arquette singling to center in the second at-bat of the inning, immediately followed by a Turley double to deep left field to score Arquette all the way from first. With that, the Beavers avoided a late-game collapse and advanced to 1-0 in the CWS.

USA TODAY Sports provided updates, scores and highlights of Oregon State vs. Louisville at the College World Series. See them below:

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Gavin Turley walks it off for Oregon State

Who else but Gavin Turley!

Turley lines one down the left field line to score Aiva Arquette from first for a walk-off double to defeat Louisville 4-3 at the College World Series.

Oregon State puts winning run on in ninth

Aiva Arquette smashes one into left center field for his third hit of the game. The game-winning run is now on base for the Beavers as Gavin Turley comes out to the plate with one out in the inning.

Oregon State gets out of jam

Louisville’s ninth inning rally comes to a close on a weak dribbler back to Kellen Oaks, who fires a fastball to first to retire Matt Klein. The Cardinals do their damage in the inning to keep the game going, as they tied the game on a hit up the middle from Kamau Neighbors after two costly errors from Oregon State.

The top of the lineup is coming up for the Beavers, who look to walk it off in the bottom of the ninth.

Louisville ties the game in ninth

A wacky top of the ninth inning in Omaha allows Louisville to tie the game at 3-3 on an RBI single up the middle from Kamau Neighbors.

The Cardinals were able to get a runner in scoring position at third after Alex Alicea reached on an error by Oregon State shortstop Aiva Arquette, who overthrew the play at first. Alicea then advanced to third on a throw into no-mans land by Wilson Weber.

Louisville has life for the first time tonight with the opportunity to take its first lead.

Wilson Weber throws out Tanner Shiver at second

A massive first out of the inning in the top of the ninth comes from Oregon State catcher Wilson Weber, as he throws out Louisville pinch runner Tanner Shiver at second.

Interesting decision there by Louisville to put the steal on with the tying run at first with no outs in the inning. During the umpire review, ESPN’s cameras showed Shiver saying he had a bad jump on the stolen base attempt.

Louisville gets within one of Oregon State

Here comes the Cards!

Tague Davis beats the shift with a single into right center field, allowing Zion Rose to score from third to make it a 3-2 Oregon State lead in the top of the ninth. A costly error from Gavin Turley comes to haunt the Beavers.

Zion Rose hits leads off triple in ninth

Zion Rose connects on the first pitch of the night from Kellan Oakes and it results in a leadoff triple after Oregon State left fielder Gavin Turley took the gamble and attempted to make the diving catch. A costly play there by Turley.

Kellan Oakes comes into pitch for Oregon State

The Beavers will go to Kellan Oakes for the final three outs in the top of the ninth.

Oregon State takes lead into ninth inning

Louisville reliever Jake Schweitzer catches Oregon runner Canon Reeder sleeping at first base for the pickoff. Nice quick tag by Tague Davis at first. Oregon State challenged the play but the call was confirmed.

The Beavers head into the ninth inning looking for the final three outs to pick up Win No. 1 in Omaha at the 2025 College World Series.

Louisville turns to Jake Schweitzer

Trailing 3-1 in the bottom of the eighth inning, Louisville turns to Jake Schweitzer to relieve Justin West on the mound.

He enters the game with a 2.13 ERA on the season with 20 strikeouts.

Tague Davis makes snagging play at first

It’s 3-1 Oregon State going into the eighth inning.

Louisville strands two runners

Louisville knocked on the door in the seventh inning with two runners in scoring position but was unable to bring any of them home as Lucas Moore chases an off-speed pitch in the dirt from Wyatt Queen for the third out of the seventh. A nasty pitch by Queen to get himself out of the jam.

It’s stretch time in Omaha with Oregon State leading 3-1.

Oregon State’s Wyatt Queen flashes leather

Wyatt Queen doesn’t have much time to settle himself into the game, as he busts off the mound to make an impressive play at first to retire Zion Rose. A really nice PFP play by Queen to start his night on the mound, as he comes in relief of Eric Segura.

Oregon State leaves bases loaded

Tip your cap, Justin West.

The Cardinals’ southpaw escapes the bases-loaded jam in the sixth inning by getting back-to-back punch outs against Carson McEntire and Trent Caraway. Real nice piece of pitching by West to get out of the jam, particularly after giving up an unearned run on Alex Alicea’s error at shortstop.

A tough blow for Oregon State, which is now 1 for 7 with runners in scoring position. It’s 3-1 Beavers going into the seventh.

Oregon State extends lead on Louisville error

Justin West draws up exactly what he wanted, but Louisville shortstop Alex Alicea bobbles the ball on what would have been an inning-ending 6-4-3 double play. Alicea’s error at short allows AJ Singer to score from third and keeps the bases loaded with one out for Oregon State. It’s now 3-1 Oregon State in the sixth inning.

Louisville turns to Justin West

Patrick Forbes’ night is done on the mound for Louisville after walking Jacob Krieg to load the bases with one out in the sixth inning. The Cardinals will now turn to left-hander Justin West.

Forbes was sharp for much of the night for the Cardinals as he struck out 10 through 5 1/3 innings. He is responsible for all three runners on base.

Oregon State knocking on door

The Beavers are knocking on the door in the bottom of the sixth inning after back-to-back one-out hits from AJ Singer and Tyce Peterson.

Louisville starter Patrick Forbes is nearing the 100-pitch mark on the mound. Oregon State is 1 for 4 with runners in scoring position.

Eric Segura gets out of jam

Eric Segura comes up big for Oregon State as he gets out of the jam. Facing runners on second and third with one out after throwing a pitch to the backstop, Segura answers back by getting Eddie King Jr. to strike out and Garret Pike to pop up in foul territory behind home plate to Wilson Weber.

Oregon State takes a 2-1 lead into the bottom of the sixth against Louisville.

Louisville gets on the board

Eric Segura gets Jake Munroe to roll one to shortstop but Aiva Arquette can’t come up with the ball, allowing Kamau Neighbors to score and Munroe to reach first.

It’s now 2-1 Oregon State in the top of the sixth.

Oregon State makes pitching change

Oregon State makes a surprising call to the bullpen as Dax Whiney hits a roadblock in the top of the sixth inning after Louisville puts two runners into scoring position with one out. It will be Eric Segura who is summoned from the bullpen for the Beavers.

Whitney cruised through his first four innings in his first CWS start before losing some gas in the last two. He finished the night with nine strikeouts.

Louisville building momentum on offense

The Cardinals have some life on offense for the first time on the night as Kamau Neighbors works a walk and Moore singles over the head of Aiva Arquette into left field.

Matt Klein would then advance both runners into scoring position with a groundout to first. Runners on second and third with one out for Louisville coming up in the sixth inning.

Oregon State strands two runners

Oregon State takes a 2-0 lead into the sixth inning vs. Louisville, but leaves two runners on base in the fifth.

Patrick Forbes has kept the Cardinals in the game after giving up two runs in the fourth inning, but Louisville is going to need some offense if it wants a shot at advancing in the winners’ bracket. Louisville has just two hits through the first five innings in Omaha.

Oregon State adds another run in fourth inning

The Beavers aren’t done scoring in the fourth inning.

Wilson Weber singles through the right side of the diamond, allowing Aiva Arquette to score from third. It’s 2-0 Oregon State over Louisville going into the fifth inning.

Oregon State takes early lead in fourth inning

Oregon State is the first to strike in Omaha, as Gavin Hurley hit one to shortstop for an RBI groundout.

The Beavers got the scoring going with back-to-back singles from Trent Caraway and Aiva Arquette. Both runners would then move up a base on a wild pitch to the backstop from Louisville pitcher Patrick Forbes. Turley’s RBI breaks Oregon State coach Mitch Canham’s program record for most RBIs in a single postseason. Canham was part of Oregon State’s back-to-back national championship teams in 2006 and 2007.

Louisville leaves two runners on

Dax Whitney gets himself out of his first jam of the night by getting Garret Pike to chase a 95 mph fastball for strike three and the third out of the inning.

After not getting through Whitney in the first three innings, Louisville had some momentum in the fourth with back-to-back two-out singles from Jake Munroe and Eddie King Jr. off Whitney. A missed opportunity for the Cardinals.

Jake Munroe breaks up Dax Whitney’s perfect game

Louisville third baseman Jake Munroe breaks up Dax Whitney’s perfect game attempt with a single through the left side of the field in the top of the fourth. It’s the first hit and baserunner of the night for the Cardinals.

Before giving up a two-out single to Munroe, Whitney was rolling for the Beavers on the mound as he struck out seven of his first 10 hitters while throwing 70% of his pitches for a strike.

Oregon State, Louisville scoreless after three innings

It’s all knotted up at 0-0 between Oregon State and Louisville after three innings in Omaha.

After two and a half innings with no baserunners, Oregon State first baseman Jacob Krieg was the game’s first runner after being hit by a pitch. Louisville first baseman Tague Davis, the son of former MLB catcher Ben Davis, then made a nice play at first base to complete the 4-6-3 double play to retire Krieg and Canon Reeder.

Dax Whitney strikes out side in second inning

Good morning, good afternoon, good night! Dax Whitney is feeling it on the mound as he strikes out the side in the top of the second inning. He has now struck out five of the first Louisville batters he has faced.

The Beavers’ freshman ace has done a nice job through the first two innings of mixing in his pitches during at-bats with speed and placement. It’s 0-0 between Oregon State and Louisville going into the home half of the second.

Oregon State, Louisville scoreless after first inning

Both teams go down in order 1-2-3 in their halves of the first inning. Oregon State pitcher Dax Whitney and Louisville pitcher Patrick Forbes each have a pair of strikeouts to start their nights on the bump.

Is the College World Series double elimination?

Yes, the College World Series is double elimination in bracket play until the start of the best-of-three CWS finals.

Each team starts at a 0-0 record and is guaranteed at least two tournament games. Similar to the regional tournament format, the winner continues in the winner’s bracket, while the loser fends off elimination until a winner emerges from the bracket.

If a team loses two games in either the double elimination or championship series portions of the CWS, they are eliminated.

Dax Whitney opens CWS career with back-to-back strikeouts

Not a bad first impression in Omaha for Oregon State freshman pitcher Dax Whitney, as he retires Lucas Moore and Matt Klein on back-to-back strikeouts.

Two outs in the top of the first inning for the Beavers.

Pregame

Eddie King Jr. NCAA baseball tournament stats

Louisville shortstop Eddie King Jr. has been on a tear in the postseason for the Cardinals — and is one of the reasons why they are back in Omaha.

In five NCAA baseball tournament games this season, King Jr. is hitting a scorching .545 at the plate with eight RBIs and three home runs. Entering the CWS, King Jr. is 20 for 36 (.556) over his last 10 games with six doubles, seven homers, 17 RBIs and 11 runs scored. He also took home Nashville Regional Most Valuable Player honors after hitting .500 with four RBIs in the three games.

Louisville starting lineup

Here’s Louisville’s starting lineup for its CWS game vs. Oregon State:

  1. CF Lucas Moore
  2. C Matt Klein
  3. 3B Jake Munroe
  4. DH Eddie King Jr.
  5. RF Garret Pike
  6. LF Zion Rose
  7. 1B Tague Davis
  8. SS Alex Alicea
  9. 2B Kamau Neighbors

Patrick Forbes is starting on the mound for the Cardinals.

Oregon State starting lineup

Here’s Oregon State’s starting lineup for its CWS game vs. Louisville:

  1. 3B Trent Caraway
  2. SS Aiva Arquette
  3. LF Gavin Turley
  4. C Wilson Weber
  5. 2B AJ Singer
  6. DH Tyce Peterson
  7. 1B Jacob King
  8. CF Canon Reeder
  9. RF Easton Talt

Dax Whitney is starting on the mound for the Beavers.

Oregon State, Louisville arrive at CWS

The Beavers and the Cardinals have arrived at Charles Schwab Field Omaha for their CWS game. It is the first time both teams are facing each other since the 2013 College World Series.

How did Louisville make College World Series?

The Cardinals’ appearance at the 2025 College World Series has come by way of catching some last-season fire.

Louisville began its road to Omaha by sweeping its way through the Nashville Regional, which included a second-round win over top overall seed Vanderbilt. The Cardinals would secure their first regional title since 2022 with a 6-0 shutout win over Wright State.

Dan McDonnell’s squad would then take two of three games in the Louisville Super Regional against their ACC foe, Miami. The Cardinals’ super regional win over the Hurricanes sent them back to Omaha for the sixth time in program history and the first time since 2019. 

How did Oregon State make College World Series?

The Beavers advanced to the College World Series for the first time since winning it all in 2018 by taking two of three games in the Corvallis Super Regional against No. 9 Florida State. Oregon State also played itself out of the ‘elimination bracket’ of the Corvallis Regional to advance out of the first weekend.

Oregon State’s appearance in Omaha is a bit of a historic one, as it comes as an independent. The Beavers are the first independent to make the eight-team CWS field since Miami in 2004.

Click here to read more on why Oregon State is competing as an independent.

What time does Oregon State vs Louisville baseball start?

  • Date: June 13
  • Time: 7 p.m. ET
  • Where: Charles Schwab Field Omaha (Omaha, Neb.)

Oregon State and Louisville are scheduled for a 7 p.m. ET first pitch at Charles Schwab Field Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska in the opening round of the College World Series.

What TV channel is Oregon State vs Louisville baseball on today?

  • TV channel: ESPN
  • Streaming options: ESPN app | ESPN+ | Fubo (free trial)

The CWS opening-round game between Oregon State and Louisville will air on ESPN. Mike Monaco (play-by-play), Kyle Peterson (analyst), Chris Burke (analyst) and Kris Budden (sideline reporter) will be on the call for ESPN.

Streaming options for the game include the ESPN app (with a TV login), ESPN+ — ESPN’s subscription streaming service — and Fubo, the last of which carries ESPN and offers a free trial to potential subscribers.

Streaming Oregon State vs. Louisville baseball with ESPN+

Oregon State vs Louisville baseball predictions, picks, odds

Odds courtesy of BetMGM as of Thursday, June 12

  • Spread: Oregon State -1.5
  • Over/under: 10.5
  • Moneyline: Oregon State (-175) | Louisville (+135)

NCAA baseball schedule

The 2025 NCAA baseball tournament began on May 30 with the regional round of play. The tournament has since advanced to the super regionals, which began June 6 and will run no later than June 9. The College World Series is the final step of the postseason and began on June 13. It will run through June 22 or 23, depending on whether the championship series requires two or three games.

Here is more detailed look at the latest college baseball schedule and NCAA Tournament bracket update.

  • Regional round: May 30-June 2
  • Super Regional round: June 6-9
  • College World Series: June 13-22/23
  • CWS finals: June 21-22/23

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Indiana Fever superstar Caitlin Clark is set to make her highly-anticipated return to the court.

Clark has been cleared to return to the lineup after a left quad injury kept her sidelined for five games, officially ending her longest stretch missed due to injury in her collegiate or WNBA career. The Fever made the announcement on the team’s social media accounts Friday, June 13.

Clark suffered the quad injury during the Fever’s 90-88 loss to the New York Liberty on May 24. She was initially ruled out for at least two weeks, setting up her tentative return on June 10 against the Atlanta Dream, but the Fever ultimately decided to err on the side of caution with the 2024 WNBA Rookie of the Year.

Now, Clark is ready to play. She will suit up on June 14 as the Fever host the reigning champion Liberty. Indiana is getting back its leader in scoring (19 points per game) and assists (9.3); her assists per game average leads the league.

The Fever went 2-3 in Clark’s absence and have a 4-5 record this season entering the game against New York.

Here’s everything we know about Clark’s injury and her return:

Is Caitlin Clark playing vs. Liberty on Saturday?

Yes. The Fever announced Clark will play in Indiana’s matchup against the New York Liberty following a five-game absence due to a left quad injury.

Caitlin Clark injury update: What happened?

Clark is sure she suffered the left quad strain during the Fever’s loss to the Liberty on May 24 where she recorded a double-double with 18 points and 10 assists but she can’t pinpoint a specific play that caused her injury. She only knows that it happened early on in the contest.

“Obviously, adrenaline covers up a lot of stuff when you’re in the heat of battle,” Clark said on Thursday. “And after the game, I had some pain, and then we got an MRI, and that kind of gave me the result that I didn’t want to see. But, you know, those types of things don’t lie.”

On June 5, Clark said she’s ‘made a lot of progress’ in her recovery and ‘feels good.’ However, the star guard said she’s ‘not going to rush back if it’s not worth it,’ despite being inpatient to get back on the court. She described her status as ‘day-to-day’ and said she was will undergo a reevaluation.

What’s Caitlin Clark been up to?

Although Clark hasn’t been able to take the court, the Iowa alum has kept herself busy and engaged with her team. She’s been a vocal leader on the bench and has tapped into the ‘coaching kind of mindset,” Fever coach Stephanie White previously said, to sharpen and hone her skills.

Clark also cheered on her NBA counterparts, the Indiana Pacers, in the NBA Finals alongside her Fever teammates. She attended Game 3 of the NBA Finals and the Pacers’ Game 6 win over the Knicks to clinch the Eastern Conference Finals, both at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

Caitlin Clark stats

Clark leads the WNBA in assists per game to start the 2025 season. Here’s a look at the 2024 Rookie of the Year’s full stats (per game):

  • Games played: 4
  • Minutes: 35
  • Points: 19
  • Rebounds: 6
  • Assists: 9.3
  • Steals: 1.3
  • Blocks: 1
  • Turnovers: 5
  • FG%: 40.3
  • 3P%: 31.4

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The Las Vegas Aces have their first two-game losing streak of the season and are looking to get back on track on Friday, June 13, at home against the Dallas Wings.

They’ll have to do it without their best player.

The team says three-team MVP A’ja Wilson will not play Friday night after being placed in concussion protocol. Wilson sustained the concussion on June 11 against the Los Angeles Sparks when defending against a drive by Dearica Hamby.

Wilson left the game with 1:17 left in the third quarter and did not return.

Aces coach Becky Hammon said after the game that Wilson would need to see a doctor for evaluation. After that evaluation, she has been placed in concussion protocol.

Wilson leads the team in minutes, points, rebounds, assists, blocks and steals per game.

The Wings have struggled this season despite the arrival of No. 1 overall pick Paige Bueckers and sit at 1-10 entering Friday’s game.

The Aces are looking for their first home win of the month against Dallas. They’ll have another shot at it on Sunday, June 15, against the Phoenix Mercury.

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That streak continued against the Wildcats.

The No. 13 nationally seeded Chanticleers defeated Arizona 7-4 at Charles Schwab Field Omaha on Friday, with Coastal Carolina even saving ace pitcher Jacob Morrison for its next game against the winner of Oregon State-Louisville on June 15.

Second baseman Blake Barthol was the hero of the opening-round game, going 3 for 5 at the plate with two doubles and two RBIs. Barthol’s biggest hit came in the bottom of the eighth inning, as his two-out double scored two runs, extending Coastal Carolina’s lead to 7-4.

The Chanticleers paired their Saturday and Sunday starters, Riley Eikhoff and Cameron Flukey, for nearly the entire game. They combined for eight innings, allowing four earned runs on eight hits with seven strikeouts. Dominick Carbone then earned the save in the ninth inning.

Now on a 24-game win streak, Coastal Carolina can reach the CWS semifinals with a win in its next game. Here are the highlights from the Chanticleers’ win:

Coastal Carolina vs Arizona baseball live score

Watch Coastal Carolina vs Arizona at CWS live with ESPN+

Coastal Carolina vs Arizona baseball updates

Coastal Carolina wins it

Dominick Carbone gets a strikeout before getting a game-ending groundball that’s turned into a double play. Coastal Carolina wins it 7-4, moving into the winner’s bracket.

Coastal Carolina switching pitchers

Coastal Carolina is turning to Dominick Carbone, who might be asked to get the final three outs after Cameron Flukey allows a leadoff double.

Carbone, a left-hander, has a 2.61 ERA in 38 innings pitched this season.

Blake Barthol opens the scoring

Coastal Carolina’s two-out rally continues, as Blake Barthol ropes a two-RBI double to extend the Chanticleers’ lead to 7-4 in the bottom of the eighth. Barthol’s double came off Arizona closer Tony Pluta.

Coastal Carolina takes lead after 2-out rally

Coastal Carolina’s Wells Sykes hits a double down the right-field line with two outs, before Arizona intentionally walks Chanticleers leadoff hitter Caden Bodine. Sebastian Alexander, who has three strikeouts on the day, then bloops a single to center field to give Coastal Carolina a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the eighth inning.

Alexander comes up big after Sykes’ double to start the rally.

Garrett Hicks shuts door for Arizona

Garrett Hicks enters for Arizona with a runner on third base and one out and picks up two huge strikeouts to get out of the bottom of the seventh inning with the score still tied at 4-4. Hicks only needs six pitches to rack out two strikeouts.

Blake Barthol hits leadoff double

Coastal Carolina’s Blake Barthol hits a leadoff double to start the bottom of the seventh, which marks the Chanticleers’ first extra-base hit of the day. Barthol’s hit just barely stayed fair down the right-field line.

Coastal Carolina quickly ties game

Dean Mihos leads off the inning with a single, then advances to second base on a wild pitch. Mihos then advances to third and eventually home on a pair of groundouts by Wells Sykes and Caden Bodine.

Arizona-Coastal Carolina is tied at 4-4.

Arizona turns to Casey Hintz

Owen Kramkowski’s day is over, and Arizona turns to sidearm reliever Casey Hintz in the bottom of the sixth inning. Hintz has a 5.53 ERA in 53 2/3 innings pitched this season.

Kramkowski’s final line: Three earned runs on nine hits and a walk with seven strikeouts across five innings.

Coastal Carolina strands two runners

Arizona takes a 4-3 lead despite not hitting a ball past the infield, as Cameron Flukey hits three batters in the top of the sixth inning. Flukey gets a strikeout and a groundout to get out of the frame.

Coastal Carolina is going to need its offense to get rolling again.

Arizona takes 4-3 lead

Garen Caulfield hits a groundball to second base, but Coastal Carolina is unable to get the lead runner at home or turn the double play, resulting in one out at second base.

Arizona now leads 4-3 with one out and runners on first and third in the top of the sixth inning.

Arizona ties it

Cameron Flukey hits another batter, which scores Aaron Walton from third base to make the score 3-3. Flukey’s off-speed pitch just got away from him, narrowly hitting Maddox Mihalakis’ back foot.

Arizona loads bases

Adonys Guzman surprises Coastal Carolina, laying down a bunt and it sneaks past the pitcher for a single. Arizona has the bases loaded with no outs for Maddox Mihalakis.

Arizona with runners on first and second

Arizona puts back-to-back runners on base to start the top of the sixth inning after Cameron Flukey hits both batters with a pitch. The Wildcats have no outs and still trail 3-2 but are looking to do some damage here with 4-hole hitter Adonys Guzman coming up to bat.

Coastal Carolina regains lead

Blagen Pado’s single scores Blake Barthol from third base, giving Coastal Carolina a 3-2 lead in the bottom of the fifth inning. The Chanticleers have done a nice job of putting runners in scoring spots, as Barthol stole second base before tagging and advancing to third base on a flyout in the frame.

Pado’s groundball single would’ve likely been right to the Arizona second baseman, but the defender was covering second base as Walker Mitchell was attempting to steal second base.

Cameron Flukey makes quick work of Arizona

Cameron Flukey has no issues in the fifth inning, retiring Arizona in order on 10 pitches. Flukey’s fastball was up to 97 mph in the inning.

Coastal Carolina turns to Cameron Flukey

Riley Eikhoff’s day is done after four innings of work, as Coastal Carolina turns to Cameron Flukey in relief. Flukey, a weekend starter for the Chanticleers, has a 3.24 ERA this season and is making his first relief appearance of the year.

Eikhoff finishes the day allowing two runs on six hits with four strikeouts, throwing 45 pitches.

Arizona ties it

The Wildcats get back-to-back doubles from Adonys Guzman and Maddox Mihalakis, who scores Guzman to tie the game at 2-2 in the top of the fourth inning. Arizona is starting to get to Riley Eikhoff.

Mason White homers

Arizona gets on the board in the top of the fourth inning, as shortstop Mason White sneaks a home run just over the left-field fence for his 20th of the season.

Coastal Carolina left fielder Sebastian Alexander nearly robbed the home run, but his glove was just short.

Coastal Carolina goes down in order

Owen Kramkowski puts together a strong inning, as he sits down Coastal Carolina in order, picking up another strikeout. Kramkowski has allowed two runs on five hits with four strikeouts through three innings.

Riley Eikhoff strands runner

Riley Eikhoff allows a one-out double off the left-field wall, but gets out of the inning unscathed, stranding the runner at second base. Eikhoff has allowed three hits and no walks with three strikeouts through three innings so far, only throwing 30 pitches.

Coastal plates 2 runs

How about the 9-hole hitter? Wells Sykes drills a two-RBI single to left field to score two runs for Coastal Carolina, giving it a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the second inning.

Coastal Carolina loads bases

Coastal Carolina with some success in the second inning, with back-to-back singles from Colby Thorndyke and Blagen Pado to start the frame. Ty Dooley then pops up to the pitcher right near the foul line, but Owen Kramkowski dives and can’t haul in the catch, loading the bases with no outs.

Short inning for Coastal Carolina

Riley Eikhoff faces the minimum three hitters, as he allows a leadoff single before getting a strikeout and a groundout, with the latter turning into a double play.

Eikhoff has thrown 16 pitches through two innings, 14 of which were strikes.

Coastal Carolina-Arizona scoreless after first

Owen Kramkowski strands a runner at second after getting a strikeout and flyout to end the first inning. Kramkowski’s numbers this season aren’t eye-popping (5.48 ERA), but his slider and two-seam fastball were quite effective in the frame.

Coastal Carolina with runner in scoring position

Catcher Caden Bodine lines a leadoff single to right field before Sebastian Alexander’s sacrifice bunt moves Bodine to second base with one out.

Coastal Carolina with an early scoring opportunity here after playing some small ball.

Nothing doing for Arizona

Brendan Summerhill hits a leadoff single, but Coastal Carolina starter Riley Eikhoff gets a strikeout and a flyout before catcher Caden Bodine throws out Summerhill on a steal attempt to end the inning.

Eikhoff is filling up the zone and having success with all three of his pitches early.

CWS is underway

Riley Eikhoff fires the first pitch and Coastal Carolina-Arizona is underway at the College World Series. Here we go.

Coastal Carolina, Arizona pitchers today

  • Coastal Carolina: RHP Riley Eikhoff (6-2, 2.90 ERA)
  • Arizona: RHP Owen Kramkowski (9-6, 5.48 ERA)

Coastal Carolina opting to pitch Riley Eikhoff instead of ace Jacob Morrison, who has an 11-0 record and a 2.15 ERA across a team-leading 96 1/3 innings pitched this season. Arizona, meanwhile, is going with Owen Kramkowski, who leads the team with 87 innings pitched in 2025.

Arizona baseball lineup today

  1. RF Brendan Summerhill
  2. CF Aaron Walton
  3. SS Mason White
  4. C Adonys Guzman
  5. 3B Maddox Mihalakis
  6. 2B Garen Caulfield
  7. DH Andrew Cain
  8. 1B Tommy Splaine
  9. LF Easton Breyfogle

Coastal Carolina baseball lineup today

  1. C Caden Bodine
  2. LF Sebastian Alexander
  3. 2B Blake Barthol
  4. 3B Walker Mitchell
  5. 1B Colby Thorndyke
  6. RF Blagen Pado
  7. SS Ty Dooley
  8. DH Dean Mihos
  9. CF Wells Sykes

What time does Coastal Carolina vs Arizona baseball start?

  • Time: 2 p.m. ET
  • Date: Friday, June 13
  • Location: Charles Schwab Field (Omaha, Nebraska)

Coastal Carolina-Arizona is set for a 2 p.m. ET first pitch on Friday, June 13, at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, Nebraska.

What TV channel is Coastal Carolina vs Arizona baseball today?

  • TV channel: ESPN
  • Streaming: ESPN app, ESPN+

Coastal-Carolina-Arizona will air live on ESPN and can be streamed on the ESPN app or ESPN+, which requires a subscription.

College World Series schedule

All times Eastern

Friday, June 13

  • Game 1: Arizona vs. (13) Coastal Carolina | 2 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 2: Louisville vs. (8) Oregon State | 7 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)

Saturday, June 14

  • Game 3: Murray State vs. (15) UCLA | 2 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 4: (6) LSU vs. (3) Arkansas | 7 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)

Sunday, June 15

  • Game 5: Loser of Game 1 vs. Loser of Game 2 | 2 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 6: Winner of Game 1 vs. Winner of Game 2 | 7 p.m. | ESPN2 (ESPN+)

Monday, June 16

  • Game 7: Loser of Game 3 vs. Loser of Game 4 | 2 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 8: Winner of Game 3 vs. Winner of Game 4 | 7 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)

Tuesday, June 17

  • Game 9: Winner of Game 5 vs. Loser of Game 6 | 2 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 10: Winner of Game 7 vs. Loser of Game 8 | 7 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)

Wednesday, June 18

  • Game 11 (semifinals): Winner of Game 6 vs. Winner of Game 9 | 2 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 12 (semifinals): Winner of Game 8 vs. Winner of Game 12 | 7 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)

Thursday, June 19

  • Game 13 (if-necessary semifinals): Winner of Game 6 vs. Winner of Game 9 | TBD | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 14 (if-necessary semifinals): Winner of Game 8 vs. Winner of Game 12 | TBD | ESPN (ESPN+)

CWS finals

  • Game 1 (June 21): Winner of Game 11 vs. Winner of Game 12 | 7 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
  • Game 2 (June 22): Winner of Game 11 vs. Winner of Game 12 | 2:30 p.m. | ABC
  • Game 3 (June 23) (if necessary): Winner of Game 11 vs. Winner of Game 12 | 7 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Tennessee softball coach Karen Weekly on June 13 voiced her opinion against tampering in the NCAA transfer portal — and how teams have used NIL to land players.

‘I think we can all agree on 2 things: 1) women making money in sports is awesome and long overdue; 2) contacting players (directly or indirectly) before their season ends and signing them to NIL deals before they enter the portal is wrong,’ Weekly wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

‘Money isn’t the issue — tampering is!’

Weekly did not call out any specific team or reference any specific player, though her post did come less than 24 hours after Texas Tech softball and Gerry Glasco landed a commitment Lady Vols third baseman Taylor Pannell.

The All-American announced she was transferring to Texas Tech after entering the portal that same day. Pannell had a career season in 64 games this season for Tennessee. Named to the All-SEC First Team selection, she finished with a career-best .398 batting average with 74 hits, 65 RBIs and 16 home runs.

Weekly’s comments also come at a time that Texas Tech has been active in the transfer portal since losing to No. 6 Texas in Game 3 of the WCWS championship series on June 6. Texas Tech has landed Ohio State starting catcher Jasmyn Burns, UCLA pitcher Kaitlyn Terry, Florida All-American Mia Williams and former Southern Illinois standout infielder Jackie Lis.

Texas Tech officially announced the additions of Williams, Terry and Lis on June 13. In total, Texas Tech has added three All-Americans and three of On3’s top 10 players in the transfer portal to its 2026 roster to pair with star ace NiJaree Canady.

As noted by Knox News, part of the USA TODAY Network, Texas Tech will reportedly pay its players $55 million among all its programs next year between revenue sharing and NIL. The Red Raiders’ NIL collective, The Matador Club, has not been shy about committing money to softball in the last year, which is considered by many to be a non-revenue sport.

Canady single-handedly pitched Texas Tech to its first-ever WCWS and WCWS finals appearances this year. She re-signed with the Red Raiders ahead of Game 3 vs. Texas on another lucrative, record-breaking NIL deal. According to ESPN, Canady’s new NIL deal is another seven-figure NIL deal for the upcoming 2026 season, while On3’s Pete Nakos reported it is worth at least $1.2 million.

Tennessee finished 47-17 overall on the season and advanced to the WCWS semifinals in Weekly’s 24th season at the helm of the program.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Mason Howell, the youngest player in the 125th U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club, won’t be playing the weekend, but he proved he belonged in the 156-player field.

The 17-year-old from Thomasville, Georgia, hovered around the cut line for more than half of the second round before ultimately being undone by a string of bogeys. Howell was in the middle of his final hole when second-round play was suspended because of lightning in the area. Howell had shot a +5 on the day and was sitting at 12-over for the tournament, with the projected cut sitting at +7.

Still, the incoming high senior recorded a better round than reigning U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau, who shot 7-over in the second round and missed the cut with a +10 for the tournament. Howell also carded the same score over two days as two-time major winner Justin Thomas and finished better than three-time major winner Justin Rose, who finished 14-over for the tournament.

After a par on his opening hole of the second round, Howell knocked in a birdie on hole No. 2 and followed with some tough par saves. But things started to unravel on the seventh hole, which began a string of four bogeys in six holes. He recorded an impressive birdie on No. 14, but he followed that up with three consecutive birdies to push him well below the projected cut line.

Howell, who gained a berth in the 2025 U.S. Open by tying for first at the qualifying tournament in Atlanta, has much to look forward to: his senior year at Brookwood School, where he will seek another state title, before heading to the University of Georgia in 2026 to play golf for the Bulldogs.

USA TODAY Sports followed Howell’s second round at the U.S. Open. Scroll below for a full recap:

Mason Howell US Open score, results

Mason Howell shot a 7-over-par 77 in the first round, hovering right around the cut line. Keep track of his second-round scores here.

Howell doesn’t finish final hole as round is suspended

The second round of the 2025 U.S. Open was suspended due to lightning in the area, with Howell still needing to finish his final hole. Howell had played his second shot, an approach from the primary rough on the par 4, 498-yard 18th hole, onto the fairway, leaving him 103 yards to the hole. Howell was among a handful of golfers who could not finish the round due to weather.

Mason Howell cards third consecutive bogey

The final hour of Howell’s stay at Oakmont has not gone well. He recorded his third consecutive bogey, carding a 5 on the par 4, 305-yard 17th hole. Howell dropped to 5-over for the round and +12 for the tournament with one hole remaining.

Mason Howell records bogey on hole No. 16

The dream of playing the weekend in the U.S. Open basically came to an end for Howell after a bogey on the par 3, 238-yard 16th hole. That bogey dropped the incoming high school senior to 4-over for the round and +11 for the tournament with two holes remaining and the projected cut still sitting at +7.

Mason Howell drops another shot after bogey on hole No. 15

One hole after an impressive birdie, Howell recorded his fifth bogey of the day on the par 4, 489-yard 15th hole to drop back to +10 for the tournament and +3 for the round. With the projected cut at +7, Howell would need to birdie each of his three remaining holes.

Mason Howell bounces back with birdie on hole No. 14

After recording a par on the par 3, 161-yard 13th hole, Howell scored just his second birdie of the day on the 14th. Howell’s second shot from the fairway on the 368-yard, par 4 hole landed just three feet from the cup, and he tapped in for his first birdie since hole No. 2. Howell now stands at +2 for the round and +9 for the tournament. The projected cut remains at +7.

Bogeys piling up for Mason Howell

After recording a par on the 406-yard, par 4 11th hole, Howell found immediate trouble on the 12th hole. His tee shot on the par 5, 647-yard hole landed in the intermediate rough, and his second shot traveled just 33 feet into the primary rough. His third shot put him back on the fairway, and his fourth landed on the green, but he could not connect on a 36-yard par putt. He tapped in for yet another bogey – his fourth in six holes – dropping him to 3-over for round and +10 for the tournament.

Mason Howell bogeys again as struggles continue

Howell recorded his third bogey in the past four holes as he began his back nine. Howell could not save par on the 10th hole and had to tap in for bogey on the par 4, 472-yard 10th hole. That dropped him to +9 for the tournament (+2 for the round) and below the cut line, which has been fluctuating from +7 to +8.

Mason Howell drops another shot on hole No. 9

Howell, who was sitting right on the cut line at +7, but he dropped another shot after a bogey on the par 4, 465-yard ninth hole. It was his second bogey of the day and second in three holes. He nearly made another impressive par save, but his fourth shot came up just inches from the hole. The bogey drops him to +1 for round and +8 for the tournament, one stoke over the projected cut.

Mason Howell saves par again on hole No. 8

Another erroneous tee shot on the par 3 eighth hole left Howell in danger of dropping another stroke, but he followed that up with a brilliant second shot from the immediate rough to leave himself a 6-foot putt for par. Howell connected to remain at Even for the round and +7 for the tournament, right on the cut line.

Mason Howell in danger of missing cut

Howell hit an erroneous tee shot on the par 4, seventh hole which landed in the left bunker. But the 17-year-old nearly made a miraculous par when his nearly 49-yard putt stopped just inches before the hole. He settled for a tap-in bogey and dropped to +7 for the tournament and even on the day.

Mason Howell saves par on hole No. 6

On the par 3, 192-yard sixth hole, Howell’s tee shot landed in the rough, leaving him in a perilous position to get up and down. His second shot left him roughly 9 feet from the hole, but he sank the ensuing par putt to remain at +6 for the tournament. The current projected cut line is +7.

Mason Howell knocks in another par

Howell came up just short on a 21-foot, 6-inch putt for birdie on the 420-yard, par 4 fifth hole, but he knocked in a 3-foot par putt to remain -1 for the day and +6 for the tournament.

Mason Howell holds steady at hole No. 4

Howell missed a prime opportunity for a birdie at the par-5 fourth hole, holding steady at 6-over. Howell tapped in for par after his fourth shot left him a couple of feet from the hole.

Mason Howell pars hole No. 3

Howell remains at 6-over for the tournament after getting up and down on the par 4, 454-yard third hole.

Mason Howell birdies hole No. 2

Howell began with a par on his opening hole of the second round. He followed that up with a birdie on the par 4, 359-yard second hole to move to 6-over.

What time does Mason Howell tee off Friday: US Open start time

Mason Howell will be in the 2:31 p.m. grouping off No. 1 alongside Joakim Langergren and Chris Gotterup.

  • 2:31 p.m. (1): Joakim Langergren, Mason Howell (a), Chris Gotterupson Howell (a), Chris Gotterup
This post appeared first on USA TODAY